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On Self-Harm, Narcissism, Atonement, and the Vulnerable Christ

On Self-Harm, Narcissism, Atonement, and the Vulnerable Christ

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Paperback / softback

£25.99

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
ISBN: 9781501326219
Number of Pages: 184
Published: 14/11/2019
Width: 14 cm
Height: 21.6 cm

On Self-Harm, Narcissism, Atonement and the Vulnerable Christ explores St. Augustine of Hippo’s theology of sin, described as various forms of self-loathing and self-destruction, in addition to sin’s antidote, a vulnerable relationship with the crucified Christ. Incorporating recent thinking on self-destruction and self-loathing into his reading of Augustine, David Vincent Meconi explores why we are not only allured by sin, but will actually destroy ourselves to attain it, even when we are all too well aware that this sin will bring us no true, lasting pleasure.

Meconi traces the phenomena of self-destruction and self-loathing from Augustine to today. In particular, he focuses in on how self-love can turn to self-harm, and the need to provide salvage for such woundedness by surrendering to Christ, showing how Augustine's theology of sin and salvation is still crucially applicable in contemporary life and societies.

Foreword by Eleonore Stump, St Louis University, USA
Abbreviations and Acknowledgments

Introduction
Chapter 1: God and Those Made to Become Like God
Chapter 2: Becoming God Without God?
Chapter 3: Those Pears: Sin As Self-Sabotage
Chapter 4: Narcissism and the Paradox of Self-Love
Chapter 5: Atonement and the Vulnerable Christ
Conclusion

Further Reading
Index

Fr. David Vincent Meconi (Saint Louis University, USA)

David Vincent Meconi, S.J., is the Director of the Catholic Studies Centre and Professor of Theology at Saint Louis University, USA. His recent publications include The One Christ: St. Augustine's Theology of Deification (2013) and, as editor, The Confessions: Saint Augustine of Hippo (2012) and (co-edited with Eleonore Stump) The Cambridge Companion to Augustine (2014). He is the Editor of Homiletic and Pastoral Review.

It takes great philosophical tact and a pastor's humility to be able to enter into the troubled waters of self-hatred and find there the wreckage, still salvageable, of a lost love. David Meconi possesses tact and humility in abundance, and he writes beautifully on behalf of "those who want to disappear" (desiderantibus evanescere). By his Augustinian lights, that is, at some time or another, just about all of us. * James Wetzel, Villanova University, USA *